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Transcript
RESEARCH ARTICLE 1503
Development 135, 1503-1512 (2008) doi:10.1242/dev.016303
Life-cycle-generation-specific developmental processes are
modified in the immediate upright mutant of the brown
alga Ectocarpus siliculosus
Akira F. Peters1,2,*, Delphine Scornet1,2, Morgane Ratin1,2, Bénédicte Charrier1,2, Annabelle Monnier3,
Yves Merrien1,2, Erwan Corre4, Susana M. Coelho1,2 and J. Mark Cock1,2,†
Development of the sporophyte and gametophyte generations of the brown alga E. siliculosus involves two different patterns of
early development, which begin with either a symmetric or an asymmetric division of the initial cell, respectively. A mutant,
immediate upright (imm), was isolated that exhibited several characteristics typical of the gametophyte during the early
development of the sporophyte generation. Genetic analyses showed that imm is a recessive, single-locus Mendelian factor and
analysis of gene expression in this mutant indicated that the regulation of a number of life-cycle-regulated genes is specifically
modified in imm mutant sporophytes. Thus, IMM appears to be a regulatory locus that controls part of the sporophyte-specific
developmental programme, the mutant exhibiting partial homeotic conversion of the sporophyte into the gametophyte, a
phenomenon that has not been described previously.
INTRODUCTION
The brown algae evolved multicellularity independently of animals
and higher plants, and they include several lineages that rival higher
plants in their complexity (de Reviers, 2003). Brown algae develop
from cells that are released into the surrounding seawater (de
Reviers, 2002), and the early stages of development are therefore
easily observable. The growth of the initial cell can be markedly
different in different species, involving either unipolar or bipolar
germination (emergence of either one or two germ tubes,
respectively). Moreover, bipolar germination can result in different
growth patterns. When germination produces a symmetric filament,
this leads to the development of a prostrate, basal structure before
the erect thallus is formed (termed mediate differentiation or
heterotrichy, see Table 1). By contrast, if an asymmetric structure is
formed following germination, this leads to the immediate
development of an erect thallus without the formation of a prostrate,
basal structure (immediate differentiation) (Pedersen, 1984;
Fletcher, 1987).
Asymmetric cell divisions are defined in terms of
developmental fate, so that a cell division may be asymmetric
even if there is no morphological difference between the daughter
cells at the time of division, provided that each cell adopts a
different cell fate (Horvitz and Herskowitz, 1992; Scheres and
Benfey, 1999). Similarly, a symmetric division is defined as one
that generates daughter cells that are destined to acquire the same
developmental fate (Morrison and Kimble, 2006). Zygotic/initial
1
UPMC Université Paris 06, The Marine Plants and Biomolecules Laboratory, UMR
7139, Station Biologique de Roscoff, Place Georges Teissier, BP74, 29682 Roscoff
Cedex, France. 2CNRS, UMR 7139, Laboratoire International Associé Dispersal and
Adaptation in Marine Species, Station Biologique de Roscoff, Place Georges Teissier,
BP74, 29682 Roscoff Cedex, France. 3Microarray Platform, OUEST-Génopole,
Université de Rennes 1-Faculté de Médecine, Campus de Villejean, 35043 RENNES
Cédex, France. 4Computer and Genomics resource Centre, FR 2424, Station
Biologique de Roscoff, Place Georges Teissier, BP74, 29682 Roscoff Cedex, France.
*Present address: Bezhin Rosko, 28 route de Perharidy, 29680 Roscoff, France.
Author for correspondence (e-mail: [email protected])
†
Accepted 31 January 2008
cell divisions frequently elaborate polarity that underlies a major
body axis [Berleth and Chatfield, 2002 (http://www.aspb.org/
publications/arabidopsis/); Schneider and Bowerman, 2003;
Huynh and St Johnston, 2004]. Within the brown algae, efforts
to dissect the processes of polarisation and the first cell division
have concentrated on the Fucales, where it has been shown that
polarity can be established in response to a range of external
vectors with unidirectional light being the strongest stimulus
(Quatrano, 1997).
The filamentous brown alga Ectocarpus siliculosus (Dillwyn)
Lyngbye has been proposed as a general model for the brown algae
(Peters et al., 2004a) and its genome has been sequenced
at Genoscope (http://www.genoscope.cns.fr/spip/Ectocarpussiliculosus,740.html). The life cycle of E. siliculosus involves an
alternation between two macroscopic generations that differ
morphologically (sporophytes produce few laterals and develop
from a branched prostrate base, whereas gametophytes are more
richly branched and devoid of a prostrate base) (Kornmann, 1956;
Müller, 1964). In this study, we show that, unlike the sporophyte,
which is formed by mediate differentiation following bipolar
germination and symmetric division of the initial cell (Peters et al.,
2004b), the E. siliculosus gametophyte exhibits an asymmetric
initial cell division and immediate differentiation of an erect thallus.
Therefore, the alternation of generations in E. siliculosus involves
an alternation between two fundamentally different patterns of initial
cell division: symmetric and asymmetric.
A spontaneous mutant, immediate upright (imm), exhibited
several phenotypic traits characteristic of the gametophyte
generation during the sporophyte generation of its life cycle,
including asymmetric initial cell division. This mutant produced
functional meiospores, demonstrating that symmetric initial cell
division is not essential for an individual to become a functional
sporophyte. However, specific alterations in the expression of
generation-specific genes were detected in this mutant using a
microarray approach, indicating that imm is a bona fide life
cycle mutant and hence that the phenotypic traits that are
modified in imm are normally under life cycle control in wildtype algae.
DEVELOPMENT
KEY WORDS: Brown algae, Ectocarpus siliculosus, Immediate upright, Initial-cell division, Life cycle, Phaeophyceae
1504 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Development 135 (8)
Table 1. Definitions of terms used in the text
Term used
Definition and comments
Gametophyte
Sporophyte
Partheno-sporophyte
Plurilocular sporangium
Unilocular sporangium
Plurilocular gametangium
Meio-spore
Mito-spore
Rhizoid
Mediate differentiation
Immediate differentiation
The gamete-producing generation of a plant life cycle.
The spore-producing generation of a plant life cycle.
Sporophyte generation produced by direct germination of gametes that have not undergone fusion.
Multi-chambered reproductive structure containing mitotically produced spores that reproduce the
sporophyte. Found on the sporophyte.
Single-chambered reproductive structure containing meiotically produced spores that develop as
gametophytes. Found on the sporophyte.
Multi-chambered reproductive structure containing gametes. Found on the gametophyte.
Spore generated via a meiotic division in a unilocular sporangium.
Spore generated without meiosis in a plurilocular sporangium.
Root-like filament consisting of narrow (3-5 ␮m) cells.
Establishment of a prostrate, basal structure before development of an erect thallus. Associated with
symmetric initial cell division and exhibited by the Ectocarpus sporophyte. Also termed heterotrichy.
Direct development of an erect thallus. Associated with asymmetric initial cell division and exhibited by the
Ectocarpus gametophyte.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Algal strains and culture conditions
The Ectocarpus siliculosus strains used were meiotic offspring of a field
sporophyte collected in 1988 in San Juan de Marcona, Peru. The
gametophyte clone used for genome sequencing, Ec 32, is from the same
lineage (Table 2). The strains were cultivated in 7-8 ml polystyrene Petri
dishes, occasionally on glass cover-slips, normally at 15°C in white
fluorescent light of 10-30 ␮mol m–2s–1 photon fluence rate. Additional light
regimes used were: natural diffuse light at 5°C, dim (1 ␮mol m–2s–1) white
light at 15°C and bright (10-30 ␮mol m–2s–1) white light at 10 and 20°C. Day
length was 10 hours light: 14 hours dark, except for the 5°C condition in
which day length varied according to the season. The culture medium was
half-strength, Provasoli-enriched (Starr and Zeikus, 1993), autoclaved
seawater. For the study of germination, spores or gametes were allowed to
settle on cover-slips. Zygotes were produced and isolated as described by
Peters et al. (Peters et al., 2004b). The sex of gametophytes was determined
by microscopic observation of zygote formation in hanging-drop
preparations (Kawai et al., 2005) in which the strains to be tested had been
combined with fertile thalli of male and female reference strains. Genetic
analysis of meiotic offspring followed Müller (Müller, 1991).
Photopolarisation tests
To determine the response of the gametophyte and the sporophyte to a light
stimulus, algae were grown at low density in 5 cm (7-8 ml) Petri dishes
under unidirectional white light. The orientation of germination was scored
according to four quadrants (i.e. towards the light, away from the light or in
one of the two quadrants perpendicular to the light). Algae that germinated
into the quadrant away from the light were scored as exhibiting negative
phototropy.
Microarray analysis of gene expression
A microarray was constructed by spotting PCR amplified inserts from two
suppression subtraction hybridisation (SSH) libraries, enriched for genes
expressed preferentially during the sporophyte and gametophyte
generations, respectively, onto glass slides. The SSH libraries were produced
in a differential screen between the partheno-sporophyte and gametophyte
generations of the life cycle using the PCR Select kit (Clontech, Mountain
View, CA, USA). Oligonucleotides corresponding to flanking vector
sequences were used to amplify inserts from 600 clones randomly chosen
from each library and these 1200 PCR products were spotted in triplicate on
each microarray. RNA was extracted as described by Apt et al. (Apt et al.,
1995) and its quality was monitored on a Bioanalyser using an RNA 6000
Nano Assay kit (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA). Labelled cDNA targets
were synthesised from 15 ␮g of total RNA with an oligo(dT) primer and by
indirect labelling using the CyScribe cDNA Post Labelling kit (Amersham,
Piscataway, NJ, USA). Hybridised microarrays were scanned with a
GenePix 4000 (Molecular Devices Corporation, Downingtown, PA, USA)
and analysed using GenePix Pro 5.1. All hybridisations were carried out in
triplicate. Data corresponding to a set of 132 probes that did not show
differential expression during the sporophyte and gametophyte generations
were used to normalise the data obtained from the different hybridisation
experiments. The average value for the coefficient of variation was 0.29 for
Name
Generation,
sex
Germination
phenotype*
Genotype
Desc ription
Origin
Ye a r
Other names
Ec 17
SP
Wild type
IMM IMM
Field isolate
1988
Ec 25
Ec 32
Ec 137
GA f
GA m
GA m
Wild type
Wild type
imm
IMM
IMM
imm
2002
2002
2002
CCAP† 1310/193,
SAm120Sp‡
CCAP 1310/3
CCAP 1310/4
CCAP 1310/319
Ec 372
Ec 419
Ec 420
Ec 421
Ec 423
Ec 428
SP
GA f
GA m
GA f
GA m
SP
Wild type
imm
imm
Wild type
Wild type
imm
imm IMM
imm
imm
IMM
IMM
imm imm
Meiotic offspring from Ec 17
Meiotic offspring from Ec 17
Meiotic offspring from Ec 17,
germination mutant
Cross 25f wt 137m imm
Meiotic offspring from 372
Meiotic offspring from 372
Meiotic offspring from 372
Meiotic offspring from 372
Product of cross 419f imm ⫻ 420m imm
San Juan de
Marcona, Peru
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
Laboratory
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
CCAP 1310/320
CCAP 1310/321
CCAP 1310/322
CCAP 1310/323
CCAP 1310/324
CCAP 1310/325
Ec 429
Ec 430
Ec 432
SP
SP
SP
Wild type
Wild type
Wild type
imm IMM
imm IMM
IMM IMM
Cross 419f imm 423m wt
Cross 421f wt 420m imm
Cross 421f wt 423m wt
This work
This work
Laboratory
2004
2004
2003
CCAP 1310/326
CCAP 1310/327
CCAP 1310/328
*Germination of settled gametes for gametophytes or of zygotes or mito-spores for sporophytes.
†CCAP, Culture Collections of Algae and Protozoa (marine) reference number, Dunstaffnage Marine Laboratory, Oban, Scotland.
‡Designation in Stache-Crain et al. (Stache-Crain et al., 1997).
SP, sporophyte; GA, gametophyte; imm, immediate upright mutation.
DEVELOPMENT
Table 2. Ectocarpus strains used in this study
the wild-type partheno-sporophyte samples and 0.35 for the imm mutant
partheno-sporophyte samples. Full descriptions of the array design, probe
sequences, RNA extraction, cDNA labelling, hybridisation and
normalisation protocols are available via the ArrayExpress database
(accession number E-MEXP-848). Statistical analysis was carried out using
the Statistical Analysis of Microarrays (SAM) method (Tusher et al., 2001)
in the TIGR MeV package, version 3.1. The cDNA fragments corresponding
to probes that had been shown to be significantly, differentially expressed
by this analysis were sequenced and compared with the EST and genomic
sequence data available for Ectocarpus siliculosus.
Quantitative PCR
Total RNA was extracted from diploid sporophytes, partheno-sporophytes
and gametophytes of both wild-type and imm strains using the Plant RNeasy
extraction kit (Qiagen, Courtaboeuf, France), and treated with RNAse-free
DNAse-I according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Qiagen). The
concentration and quality of the RNA was determined by spectrophotometry
and agarose gel electrophoresis. Two milligrams of total RNA were reversetranscribed using the Superscript II RT kit (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg,
MD, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Oligonucleotide sequences were designed for each gene using both
Primer Express TM1.0 (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) and
Oligo 4.0 (Rychlik and Rhoads, 1989). cDNAs were amplified using the IQ
Sybrgreen supermix (Biorad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) on a
Chromo4 System thermocycler (BioRad Laboratories). The amplification
efficiency was tested using a genomic dilution series and was always at least
80%. The specificity of amplification was checked with a dissociation curve.
Details of the oligonucleotides used can be provided on request. E.
siliculosus genomic DNA was used as a quantification reference. A dilution
series ranging from 37 to 48671 copies of the E. siliculosus genome was
prepared and tested for each gene amplification. The EF1␣ gene was chosen
as a constitutively expressed control based on tests carried out on three
Ectocarpus genes (encoding actin, EF1␣ and ␣-tubulin). Normalisation was
carried out using the EF1␣ data and the geNorm method (Vandesompele et
al., 2003). The normalised data were expressed as the mean±s.d. calculated
from three independent biological experiments.
RESULTS
Gametophytes and sporophytes of E. siliculosus
exhibit markedly different patterns of early
development
The sexual life cycle of E. siliculosus involves an alternation
between two independent generations: the sporophyte and the
gametophyte (Fig. 1). To compare the early development of these
two generations, gametophytes were raised from meiospores of a
heterozygous, field-isolated, sporophyte (strain Ec 17) and their
development in culture compared with that of sporophytes that were
also derived from the Ec 17 strain (see Table 1 for a glossary of the
terms used in this section). A total of 120 gametophytes were
isolated and all exhibited the same pattern of early development.
Germination was bilateral and an asymmetric division of the initial
meiospore cell resulted in the occurrence of different cell types in
the two emerging germ tubes. The first germ tube developed into a
rhizoidal filament 3-5 ␮m in diameter (Fig. 2A), whereas the second
germ tube formed an upright filament (Fig. 2B). The rhizoid had a
wavy appearance and, as it originated 2-7 days before the emergence
of the second germ tube, it was often quite long by the time that the
upright filament elongated (Fig. 2C). The cells of the upright
filament were characterised by broader (initially 10 ␮m in diameter
but enlarging to 20-40 ␮m in higher thallus parts) and regularly
cylindrical cells (Fig. 2B,D). The upright filaments produced laterals
from the distal end of filament cells (Fig. 2E) to form a richly
branched thallus (Fig. 2F). After 3-5 weeks in white light,
gametophytes became fertile with plurilocular gametangia forming
at terminal or lateral positions on the upright filaments (Fig. 2G). On
RESEARCH ARTICLE 1505
older gametophytes, additional rhizoids were formed as laterals from
the basal ends of upright filaments (Fig. 2H,I). Gametophytes
adhered only weakly to glass or polystyrene, easily becoming
detached and floating off into the medium. The overall development
of the gametophyte was of the immediate differentiation type
because the erect thallus developed directly without prior
establishment of a prostrate basal structure.
E. siliculosus sporophytes can be produced in a number of
different ways (Fig. 1): (1) via gamete fusion and zygote
production; (2) by mito-spores produced by the plurilocular
sporangia of sporophytes; (3) from a minority of the meio-spores
produced by unilocular sporangia (the majority producing
gametophytes); or (4) by parthenogenesis from settled unfertilised
gametes (referred to as partheno-sporophytes). The early
development of sporophytes produced by each of these alternative
pathways was compared with the early development of the
gametophyte generation of the same strain, described above. All
sporophytes showed the same pattern of development, except that
the growth of partheno-sporophytes was slower during the first few
days. Germination was bipolar, as in the gametophyte. However, in
contrast to the situation observed in the gametophyte, the two
daughter cells of the sporophyte initial cell exhibited symmetric cell
fates, producing the two ends of a symmetric prostrate filament
(Fig. 3A-E). Because of these identical cell fates, the initial cell
division in the sporophyte is defined as symmetric despite the
morphological asymmetry of the initial cell at the time of cell
division (Fig. 3B). This follows the definition given by Morrison
and Kimble (Morrison and Kimble, 2006).
The cells of the prostrate filament became rounder and their cell
walls thickened as they became older (i.e. in the central region of the
filament; Fig. 3E,F). Laterals with the same morphology as the
initial filament were produced from the rounded cells, and grew
along the surface of the substratum (Fig. 3F) or up into the medium.
Upright filaments with cylindrical cells (20-30 ␮m diameter)
developed on the prostrate base after 4-5 weeks to produce an erect
thallus (Fig. 3G,H). The upright filaments usually emerged from
older regions of the prostrate base. The mature sporophyte consisted
of a well-developed, prostrate basal system from which emerged the
upright filaments (Fig. 3I). Compared with gametophyte germlings,
the prostrate sporophyte thalli were not easily detached from either
polystyrene or glass surfaces. Plurilocular sporangia developed on
upright filaments after 7 weeks, in terminal or lateral positions (Fig.
3J). Occasionally, plurilocular sporangia developed on the prostrate
structure, in some cases even before the emergence of upright
filaments (not shown). Unilocular sporangia formed only on upright
filaments, in terminal or lateral positions, a week after the
plurilocular sporangia (Fig. 3K). The upright filaments were
branched (not shown), although to a lesser extent than those of a
gametophyte, and, in older thalli, also produced rhizoids (not
shown). Rhizoids originated only from the upright filaments and
were not produced by the filaments of the prostrate structure (Fig.
3H). Overall, the sporophyte exhibited mediate differentiation
because a prostrate, basal structure was formed before the
development of the erect thallus (i.e. the upright filaments).
In summary, observation of the early development of the two
generations of the E. siliculosus life cycle showed that they exhibited
markedly different patterns of development. These two patterns of
development involved either asymmetric or symmetric divisions of
the initial cells of gametophytes or sporophytes, respectively. The
gametophyte formed two types of vegetative structures (rhizoids and
upright filaments) and one kind of reproductive structure
(plurilocular gametangia), the sporophyte three types of vegetative
DEVELOPMENT
The imm life cycle mutant of Ectocarpus
1506 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Development 135 (8)
structures (prostrate filaments, rhizoids and upright filaments) and
two kinds of reproductive structure (plurilocular and unilocular
sporangia).
Responses of the germinating sporophyte and the
gametophyte to unidirectional light
Initial cell (zygote) photopolarisation has been extensively
studied in members of the Fucales group (Corellou et al., 2005;
Robinson and Miller, 1997; Fowler et al., 2004; Brownlee and
Bouget, 1998). In this group, photopolarisation causes the zygote
to germinate in a negatively phototropic manner, emitting a
rhizoid on the side opposite the light source. The markedly
different germination patterns of the E. siliculosus sporophyte
and gametophyte led us to test their responses to unidirectional
light. When grown in unidirectional light, the majority of
individuals of both the sporophyte and gametophyte generations
germinated in a negatively phototropic manner (Fig. 4).
However, this response was significantly less marked in the
sporophyte generation, where only 73% of individuals
germinated away from the light, compared with 93% for the
gametophytes (␹2=25.68, P<0.001).
The sporophyte of the imm mutant exhibits a
gametophyte-like pattern of early development
The ability of E. siliculosus to produce partheno-sporophytes from
unfertilised, haploid gametes allows the phenotypic effects of
mutations to be detected directly in both the gametophyte and the
(partheno-)sporophyte generations. Phenotypic analysis of parthenosporophytes derived from the 120 gametophytes produced by the Ec
17 sporophyte identified one gametophyte strain (Ec 137) that
produced partheno-sporophytes with an aberrant germination pattern.
The partheno-sporophytes of this strain exhibited asymmetric division
of the initial cell rather than the usual pattern of symmetric division of
the initial cell (exhibited by the partheno-sporophytes derived from its
sibling gametophytes). The same aberrant developmental phenotype
was seen in diploid sporophytes homozygous for the mutant locus (see
below for the production of such thalli). The aberrant germination
pattern involved the production of a first germ tube that developed into
a thin (3-5 ␮m diameter) filament that resembled the rhizoid produced
by the germinating gametophyte (compare Fig. 5A with Fig. 2A). The
second germ tube developed into an upright filament (initially 10 ␮m
in diameter, but widening to 20-30 ␮m in the upper part of the
filament), again similar to that produced by germinating gametophytes
(compare Fig. 5B with Fig. 2D). Based on this phenotype, the mutant
was named immediate upright (imm). The aberrant germination
pattern was observed for all developing gametes of Ec 137 and was
not modified by cultivation at 5, 10 or 20°C.
The aberrant early development of the imm mutant had a
significant effect on the morphology of the alga later in
development. After 6 weeks growth, the imm mutant had produced
a well-developed erect thallus attached to the substratum with
rhizoids (Fig. 5C), whereas wild-type sporophytes had, after the
same period of growth, developed a dense, prostrate, basal system
from which only the first upright filaments emerged (Fig. 3I). This
morphological difference between wild-type and imm sporophytes
was already visible under the light microscope after 1-2 weeks
growth and the two types of growth habit could be distinguished
with the naked eye after 4-5 weeks. This is illustrated by the
macroscopic views shown in Fig. 5D,E.
Despite the resemblance of the imm partheno-sporophyte to the
wild-type gametophyte, further analysis showed that it retained its
sporophyte identity. Mature imm partheno-sporophytes produced not
only plurilocular but also unilocular sporangia, reproductive
structures that are only produced by the sporophyte generation (Fig.
5F,G). Both of these structures can either emerge directly from a
filament or be borne on a short branch, in both the wild type and in
the imm mutant. Mating combinations with gametophyte reference
strains showed that the spores released from the plurilocular
sporangia were indeed spores and not gametes (they were incapable
of fusing with fertile gametes of either sex). Even during early
development, and despite their resemblance to the gametophyte,
imm partheno-sporophytes exhibited several features that were
typical of the wild-type sporophyte. For example, imm parthenosporophytes adhered firmly to the substratum and were difficult to
detach. Moreover, when grown in unidirectional light, the negative
phototropic response was less marked than that detected normally
for the gametophyte and more similar to that of the wild-type
sporophyte, with only 68% of the individuals tested germinating
away from the light (Fig. 4). It was also noted that, although the first
germ tube developed as a filament in the same manner as in the
gametophyte, it was less wavy in appearance (compare Fig. 5B with
Fig. 2C,D).
The meio-spores produced in the unilocular sporangia of the imm
partheno-sporophytes developed into phenotypically normal
gametophytes that produced functional gametes (data not shown).
All asexually produced sporophytes, derived either from mito-
DEVELOPMENT
Fig. 1. Life history of Ectocarpus in culture.
The sexual cycle (left) involves an alternation between
the diploid sporophyte and haploid dioecious (male and
female) gametophytes. The sporophyte produces meiospores, via a meiotic division (R!), in the unilocular
(single-chambered) sporangia. The meio-spores are
released and develop as gametophytes, which produce
gametes in plurilocular gametangia. Fusion of male and
female gametes produces a zygote (F!). The zygote
develops as a diploid sporophyte, completing the sexual
cycle. Unfertilised gametes can enter a parthenogenetic
asexual cycle by germinating without fusion to produce a
partheno-sporophyte (right). The partheno-sporophyte
produces spores in unilocular sporangia and these
develop as gametophytes, completing the parthenogenetic, asexual cycle. The parthenogenetic, asexual pathway is shown only for a male, but
female gametes can also develop parthenogenetically. Two additional pathways of asexual reproduction are possible. The first involves the
production, by sporophytes, of mito-spores in plurilocular sporangia. These spores reproduce the sporophyte stage (dashed lines). In addition, a
proportion of the meio-spores may develop as sporophytes rather than gametophytes (dotted line). This latter phenomenon is also observed with
the partheno-sporophyte but this has been omitted to simplify the diagram. R!, meiotic reduction; F!, gamete fusion.
Fig. 2. Development of the Ectocarpus gametophyte. (A) Two
germinating meiospores, the uppermost showing initiation of the
second germ tube (arrowhead). (B) Germinating meiospore after 4 days
growth, with a rhizoid developed from the first (lower) germ tube and
an upright filament from the second (upper) germ tube. (C) Five-dayold germinating meiospore in which only the rhizoid has developed so
far. (D) Gametophyte 1 week after germination; upright filament still
unbranched. The cell corresponding originally to the meiospore is
indicated by an arrow in A-D. (E) Branching of the upright filament.
(F) Mature, richly branched gametophyte; arrow indicates the base of
the thallus. (G) Gametangium. (H) Beginning of the formation of
additional rhizoids from basal ends of cells of the upright filament.
(I) Rhizoids covering an older upright filament. Scale bars: in F, 200 ␮m;
in all other micrographs, 20 ␮m.
spores produced in the plurilocular sporangia of the imm parthenosporophytes or via the gametophyte generation by parthenogenetic
germination of gametes, exhibited the imm phenotype.
Taken together, these experiments showed that the imm mutant
carried a heritable character that induces a modification of the early
development of the sporophyte, causing it to resemble the
gametophyte morphologically. The imm mutation had no observable
effect on the development of the gametophyte generation. The
appearance of the imm mutation in one of 120 gametophytes derived
from the Ec 17 sporophyte indicates that this mutation arose
spontaneously in this generation of gametophytes.
imm behaves as a stable recessive single-locus
Mendelian allele
The imm mutant (strain Ec 137) was crossed with a sister
gametophyte (Ec 25) whose gametes showed a wild-type pattern of
parthenogenetic development (see Fig. 6 for a summary of the
crosses carried out for the genetic analysis). Three zygotes were
raised from this cross and the resulting sporophytes all showed a
wild-type pattern of early development. The development of one of
these sporophytes (strain Ec 372) was followed to maturity and no
RESEARCH ARTICLE 1507
Fig. 3. Development of the Ectocarpus sporophyte. (A) Zygote, the
two eyespots are visible (arrows). (B,C) Development of the first germ
tube. (D) Initiation of the second germ tube. (E) Prostrate filament after
2 weeks, older cells (including the original zygote cell) round up.
(F) Branching of the prostrate filament. (G) Upright filament developed
from a prostrate base. (H) Transition between prostrate base and
upright filament of the thallus shown in G. Note the ‘string of pearls’
shape of the cells of the prostrate filament, contrasting with the regular
cylindrical shape of the cells of the upright filament; arrows indicate a
rhizoid formed near the base of the upright filament. (I) Mature, sixweek-old sporophyte with a well-developed prostrate basal system
(arrow) and upright filaments emerging from it. (J) Plurilocular
sporangium (mitosporangium). (K) Unilocular sporangium
(meiosporangium). zc, original zygote cell. Scale bars: 5 ␮m in A-D;
20 ␮m in E,H; 40 ␮m in F,G,J,K; 100 ␮m in I. A-D are reproduced, with
permission, from Peters et al. (Peters et al., 2004b).
differences were observed compared with the developmental pattern
of a wild-type sporophyte (data not shown). This indicated that the
imm mutation was recessive and was complemented by the wildtype allele in the diploid sporophyte.
To analyse the segregation of the imm locus in subsequent
generations, 15 unilocular sporangia were isolated individually
from the diploid sporophyte Ec 372. These sporangia, each of
which contained more than 100 meio-spores (derived from a
single meiosis followed by at least 5 mitotic divisions), produced
15 ‘families’ of gametophytes, which again exhibited a
germination pattern typical of wild-type gametophytes. For each
of these families, between 15 and 31 gametophytes were subisolated and their sex and the germination pattern of their gametes
(i.e. the partheno-sporophyte generation) were recorded (see
Table S1 in the supplementary material). Overall, 155
gametophytes produced partheno-sporophytes with a wild-type
germination pattern and 191 produced partheno-sporophytes with
the imm germination pattern. These figures are consistent with a
1:1 segregation ratio and Mendelian inheritance of a single-locus
recessive mutation (␹2=3.746, the deviation from 1:1 has a
probability greater than 0.05).
DEVELOPMENT
The imm life cycle mutant of Ectocarpus
Fig. 4. Photopolarisation of mutant and wild-type Ectocarpus
germlings in response to unidirectional light. Error bars show
standard deviations. The negative phototropic response of the wild-type
gametophyte was significantly more marked that those of the wild-type
and imm sporophytes (␹2=25.68, P<0.001). wt SP A, wild-type
partheno-sporophytes; wt SP B, wild-type sporophytes from mitospores; wt GA, wild-type gametophytes; imm SP, imm parthenosporophytes, n, number of individuals scored in each population.
Several additional crosses were performed to analyse further the
inheritance of the imm mutation. Using the gametophytes derived
from the diploid sporophyte Ec 372, crosses were performed with
all possible combinations of wild-type and imm mutant gametes
(Fig. 6). Eleven diploid sporophytes, homozygous for imm, were
raised from the cross Ec 419 (imm) ⫻ Ec 420 (imm). Without
exception, they showed the imm germination pattern, indicating full
penetrance of the imm mutation in this diploid context (provided the
dominant, wild-type IMM allele is absent). From one of these
sporophytes (Ec 428), we isolated five unilocular sporangia. From
each of the families of gametophytes that developed from them, we
selected six gametophytes and recorded their sex and the
germination pattern of their gametes. Regardless of their sex, all of
these gametophytes produced partheno-sporophytes with the imm
germination pattern.
Five diploid sporophytes were raised from the cross Ec 421
(IMM) ⫻ Ec 423 (IMM) and all showed the wild-type germination
pattern. From one of these sporophytes (Ec 432) we isolated five
unilocular sporangia and again analysed the sex and gamete
germination patterns of six gametophytes from each family.
Regardless of sex, all showed the wild-type germination pattern.
Finally, from the reciprocal crosses Ec 419 (imm) ⫻ Ec 423
(IMM) and Ec 421 (IMM) ⫻ Ec 420 (imm) we raised nine and three
zygotes, respectively, and these all showed a wild-type germination
pattern. A sporophyte from each cross (Ec 429 and Ec 430,
respectively) was raised and eight (for Ec 429) and 11 (for Ec 430)
families of gametophytes corresponding to single unilocular
sporangia were isolated. The mutant germination pattern was
observed in the germlings from ~50% of the 18-20 gametophytes
analysed per family.
In none of the above analyses did a single gametophyte produce
populations of partheno-sporophytes with both types of germination
pattern.
The analyses of progeny from the three imm/IMM heterozygous
sporophytes (Ec 372, Ec 429 and Ec 430) were used to test for
linkage between IMM and the sex locus. For this, the phenotypes of
the progeny from each unilocular sporangium were used to
determine the segregation pattern of the two loci during the single
meiotic event that had occurred in each sporangium (see Table S2 in
the supplementary material). No statistical deviation from a 1:1:1:1
Development 135 (8)
Fig. 5. Development of the imm mutant sporophyte. (A) First germ
tube of germinating zygote cell homozygous for imm. (B) Germling at a
later stage, with a rhizoid developed from the first germ tube (below)
and an upright filament from the second germ tube (above). The cell
corresponding to the original zygote is indicated by an arrow.
(C) Mature, six-week-old imm mutant sporophyte with well developed,
richly branched upright filaments. The arrow indicates the point of
attachment to the substratum. (D,E) Macroscopic views of five-weekold thalli of imm and wild-type sporophytes, respectively, illustrating the
marked difference in morphology. The wild type has formed a dense
prostrate basal system. The imm mutant lacks this structure; it
possesses a well-developed, but diffuse, erect thallus which is not as
easily visualised with the naked eye. (F) Plurilocular sporangium on an
imm mutant sporophyte. (G) Unilocular sporangium on an imm mutant
sporophyte. Scale bars: 10 ␮m in A,B; 250 ␮m in C; 1 cm in D,E; 20
␮m in F,G.
ratio was detected in any of the three crosses (e.g. for strain Ec 372,
␹2=0.266, P>0.9), indicating that IMM segregated independently of
the sex locus.
Taken together, these data demonstrate that the imm mutation was
stably inherited as a recessive Mendelian factor through several
generations of the life cycle and that the IMM locus was not linked
to the sex locus.
Gene expression in the sporophyte of the imm
mutant indicates that it is partially converted into
a gametophyte
The sporophyte generation of the imm mutant exhibited several
morphological features typical of the gametophyte generation during
its early development, such as asymmetric initial cell division, and
yet remained functionally a sporophyte (producing spores but not
gametes). To determine whether these similarities with the
gametophyte generation were due to a partial conversion of the
sporophyte into a gametophyte, we assayed the expression of two
libraries of sporophyte- and gametophyte-upregulated genes
(isolated by suppression subtraction hybridisation) in the parthenosporophyte of the imm mutant using a microarray approach. cDNA
fragment inserts from 600 clones from each of the two SSH libraries
were arrayed on glass slides and hybridised with fluorescently
labelled cDNA. Fig. 7A shows that the relative abundances of the
transcripts corresponding to the sequences spotted on the microarray
were similar in two independent total RNA samples from wild-type
DEVELOPMENT
1508 RESEARCH ARTICLE
The imm life cycle mutant of Ectocarpus
RESEARCH ARTICLE 1509
Fig. 6. Summary of the crosses carried out for the genetic
analysis of the imm mutation. Refer to Table 2 for the strain codes
(e.g. Ec 17). The genotype is shown in brackets. SP, sporophyte, GA,
gametophyte.
Fig. 7. Microarray analysis of the expression of genes
corresponding to two subtraction libraries enriched for
sporophyte- and gametophyte-specific cDNAs in wild-type and
imm partheno-sporophytes. Relative abundance of transcripts
corresponding to genes identified by suppression subtraction
hybridisation in (A) two independent wild-type partheno-sporophyte
samples and (B) a wild-type partheno-sporophyte and an imm mutant
partheno-sporophyte sample. Sequences corresponding to the
sporophyte SSH library are shown in pink, sequences corresponding to
the gametophyte SSH library are shown in blue. (C) The same graph as
shown in B except that genes that are significantly upregulated in the
imm mutant partheno-sporophyte compared with the wild type are
highlighted in yellow and genes that are significantly downregulated in
light blue. wt SP A and wt SP B, two independent wild-type parthenosporophyte cDNA targets; imm SP, imm mutant partheno-sporophyte
cDNA target.
upregulated in the imm partheno-sporophyte, whereas a group of
sporophyte-generation genes are correspondingly downregulated.
When the selected upregulated and downregulated genes were
compared with public databases, over half (23 genes) either did not
match sequences in the database or matched only hypothetical
proteins (Table 3).
Quantitative PCR analysis
Table 3 lists the genes that were identified, by the microarray
analysis, as being significantly downregulated (IDW genes) or
upregulated (IUP genes) in the imm partheno-sporophyte
compared with a wild-type partheno-sporophyte. The abundances
of mRNAs corresponding to ten of the IDW genes and to nine of
the IUP genes were measured in the sporophyte and gametophyte
generations of both the imm mutant and wild-type strains using
quantitative PCR.
The results for the wild-type partheno-sporophyte and
gametophyte samples showed that most of the IDW genes
exhibited a sporophyte-specific or sporophyte-preferential pattern
of expression, whereas most of the IUP genes exhibited a
gametophyte-specific or gametophyte-preferential pattern of
expression (Fig. 8). The difference between the expression levels
in the two generations was very marked in most cases, with a
maximum fold difference of 6975 for IUP9. Altogether, the
quantitative PCR analysis allowed the validation of 16 genes
(nine for the sporophyte and seven for the gametophyte) that
showed a differential pattern of expression between the two
generations (Fig. 8).
DEVELOPMENT
partheno-sporophytes of the strain Ec 432. By contrast, when cDNA
from the partheno-sporophyte stage of the imm mutant was
compared with cDNA from the same wild-type parthenosporophyte, there was a marked tendency for a subset of the
transcripts corresponding to the gametophyte-expressed SSH library
to be more abundant in the mutant cDNA sample and for a subset of
the transcripts corresponding to the sporophyte-expressed SSH
library to be less abundant (Fig. 7B). A statistical test, carried out
using the Statistical Analysis of Microarrays (SAM) method (Tusher
et al., 2001), identified 80 clones whose corresponding transcripts
were significantly more abundant in the imm partheno-sporophyte
RNA sample and 62 clones whose transcripts were significantly less
abundant. Seventy-nine of the 80 clones corresponding to genes
upregulated in the imm mutant (99%) were from the gametophyteexpressed SSH library, whereas 60 of the 62 clones corresponding
to downregulated genes (97%) were from the sporophyte-expressed
SSH library (Fig. 7C). Taken together with the similarity between
the early morphogenesis of the imm mutant sporophyte and that of
the wild-type gametophyte (Fig. 3), these data provide convincing
evidence that there is a partial switch from the sporophyte to the
gametophyte developmental programme in the imm mutant
sporophyte.
To further investigate the observed modifications in gene
expression in the imm mutant, the SSH clones corresponding to
genes that had been identified as significantly up- or downregulated
in the imm mutant partheno-sporophyte compared with the wildtype partheno-sporophyte were sequenced. The sequences of the
SSH clones were compared with each other, with a collection of
26,000 E. siliculosus EST sequences generated from an immature
partheno-sporophyte cDNA library and with a 7⫻ assembly of the
E. siliculosus genome sequence (A.F.P., D.S., S.M.C., B.C., N.
Aiach, B. Segurens, B. Setterblad, J. Weissenbach, P. Wincker and
J.M.C., unpublished). This analysis showed that the 142
differentially regulated SSH clones corresponded to 40 different
genes (27 downregulated genes and 13 upregulated genes). These
genes are listed in Table 3 (and the corresponding SSH clones are
listed in Table S3 in the supplementary material). All but four of the
genes that were downregulated in the imm mutant compared with
the wild type were represented in the collection of 26,000 parthenosporophyte ESTs, whereas only one of the 13 upregulated genes was
represented in this collection of sequences (Table 3). This supports
the data from the microarray analysis indicating that a group of
genes that are normally expressed during the gametophyte stage are
1510 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Development 135 (8)
We compared the expression levels of these genes in the
partheno-sporophyte and gametophyte of the imm mutant with the
values obtained for the wild type (Fig. 8). With only a few
exceptions (IDW7, IDW9, IDW11, IUP8 and IUP9), the genes
were expressed at a similar level in imm and wild-type
gametophytes. This is consistent with the fact that we did not
detect any visible phenotype of the imm mutation in the
gametophyte generation. In addition, in the imm parthenosporophyte, most of the genes assayed showed an expression level
that was either comparable with that of the wild-type gametophyte
(IDW1, IDW2, IDW3, IUP1) or was intermediate between the
abundances assayed in the two generations of the wild type
(IDW4, IDW5, IDW6, IDW7, IDW8, IUP2, IUP3, IUP4, IUP5,
IUP6, IUP7, IUP8, IUP9). For the last five genes, the transcripts
were markedly less abundant in the imm partheno-sporophyte
compared with the wild-type gametophyte but they were,
nonetheless at least 28 times more abundant than in the wild-type
partheno-sporophyte (see Table S4 in the supplementary
material). The quantitative PCR, therefore, confirmed that there
was an increase in the abundance of the transcripts of
gametophyte-expressed genes and a decrease in the abundance of
sporophyte-expressed genes in the imm sporophyte.
Quantitative PCR analyses were carried out on parthenosporophytes because, as mentioned above, we observed no
morphological or developmental differences between parthenosporophytes and diploid sporophytes derived from gamete fusions.
This was the case for both the wild-type Ec 32 strain and for the imm
mutant. To further verify that the two stages of the life cycle behaved
Gene
IDW1
IDW2
IDW3
IDW4
IDW5
IDW6
IDW7
IDW8
IDW9
IDW10
IDW11
IDW12
IDW13
IDW14
IDW15
IDW16
IDW17
IDW18
IDW19
IDW20
IDW21
IDW22
IDW23
IDW24
IDW25
IDW26
IDW27
IUP1
IUP2
IUP3
IUP4
IUP5
IUP6
IUP7
IUP8
IUP9
IUP10
IUP11
IUP12
IUP13
Upor downregulated
SSH
library
Number of
times detected
by microarray
Number
of ESTs*
Best database match
(with accession number and E value)
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Down
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
Up
SS†
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
GS‡
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
GS
SS
2
4
2
4
1
1
1
7
16
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
3
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
2
23
4
1
37
1
1
1
1
2
13
4
8
0
3
7
4
4
6
7
52
10
13
2
4
0
9
6
6
6
4
1
26
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
Hypothetical protein (Q4C2K2, 2e-07)
Hypothetical protein (Q4C2K2, 3e-07)
Hypothetical protein (Q4C2K2, 6e-07)
FCP§ (O81933, 2e-12)
Helicase (Q5NAA4, 1e-45)
No match
Peroxidase / catalase (Q6D5X9, 9e-18)
EsV-1-163¶ (Q8QKV3, 9e-16)
FCP (Q40296, 5e-92)
FirrV-1-B30** (Q6XM06, 3e-14)
Peptidoglycan-binding (Q4ZVL4, 2e-06)
FCP (Q40296, 1e-93)
EF1A (P56331, 1e-13)
Phosphoglycerate mutase (Q3CHP4, 3e-05)
No match
FCP (Q40296, 4e-91)
No match
FCP (Q40296, 5e-93)
No match
FCP (Q40298, 6e-33)
FCP (Q5K278, 6e-11)
FCP (Q40296, 7e-38)
No match
FCP (Q40296, 1e-92)
No match
Nucleotide sugar epimerase (Q7NLQ3, 3e-18)
No match
No match
No match
No match
No match
Hypothetical protein (Q4DJM6, 2e-16)
No match
No match
No match
No match
Nucleotide sugar epimerase (Q7NLQ3, 3e-18)
No match
No match
No match
*Number of times each gene was represented in a collection of 26,000 ESTs produced from an immature partheno-sporophyte cDNA library.
†
Sporophyte-gene-enriched library.
‡
Gametophyte-gene-enriched library.
§
FCP, fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c protein.
¶
EsV-1-163, Ectocarpus virus 1 gene 163.
**FirrV-1-B30 Feldmannia virus 1 gene B30.
The partial cDNA sequences corresponding to these genes have been deposited in the dbEST database and have the following GenBank Accession Numbers: EV406070 to
EV406109.
DEVELOPMENT
Table 3. Genes identified as being upregulated or downregulated in the imm mutant partheno-sporophyte compared to a wildtype partheno-sporophyte
in the same manner, we also measured transcript abundances for five
of the genes tested in Fig. 8 at both stages for both the wild type and
the imm mutant. The results of this experiment (see Fig. S1 in the
supplementary material) indicate, as expected, that parthenosporophytes and zygote-derived sporophytes exhibit very similar
patterns of gene expression and that the deregulation of generationspecific genes observed in the imm partheno-sporophyte also
occurred in a imm/imm diploid sporophyte.
DISCUSSION
Early development of the wild type sporophyte
and gametophyte
Here, we show that the sporophyte and gametophyte generations
of E. siliculosus exhibit markedly different patterns of early
development and correlate this difference with the mode of
division of the initial cells during each generation. The early
stages of gametophyte development involve asymmetric division
Fig. 8. Quantitative PCR analysis of the abundances of gene
transcripts in young partheno-sporophytes and gametophytes of
both the wild type and the imm mutant strain. The genes assayed
are described in more detail in Table 3. Error bars show standard
deviations. wt SP, wild-type partheno-sporophyte; wt GA, wild-type
gametophyte; imm SP, imm partheno-sporophyte; imm GA, imm
gametophyte.
RESEARCH ARTICLE 1511
of the initial cell and immediate differentiation, whereas the
sporophyte arises via a symmetric initial cell division and exhibits
mediate differentiation.
Explaining the stability of haploid-diploid life cycles has been
particularly problematic because, depending on the niche of the
organism, either the haploid or the diploid generation is expected to
present certain advantages and theoretical models predict that this
should lead to a dominance of one generation over the other under a
wide range of conditions (Mable and Otto, 1998). It has been
suggested, however, that if the two generations are adapted to
different ecological niches, this could stabilise a haploid-diploid life
cycle (Stebbins and Hill, 1980; Willson, 1981) and this suggestion
is supported by more recent theoretical work (Hughes and Otto,
1999). It is possible that the difference in morphology between the
wild-type sporophyte and gametophyte of Ectocarpus reflects an
adaptation to different ecological niches, with the dense, more robust
thallus of the sporophyte, particularly its prostrate base, being better
adapted for persisting in less favourable conditions during most of
the year and the more fragile gametophyte being short-lived and
adapted for producing gametes over a period of a few weeks. Future
work on the ecology of the two generations of the Ectocarpus life
cycle might therefore provide a means to test theoretical hypotheses
concerning the stability of haploid-diploid life cycles.
Phenotypic analysis of the imm mutant
The gametophyte generation of the imm mutant was phenotypically
wild type, but the sporophyte generation exhibited a gametophytelike pattern of germination and early development. Microarray
analysis of gene expression in the mutant strain showed that the
morphological resemblance of the imm sporophyte to a gametophyte
was correlated with a specific upregulation of a subset of the genes
that are normally expressed during the gametophyte generation and
a corresponding downregulation of a subset of sporophytegeneration genes. This analysis, therefore, provided evidence that
the mutant was affected in processes that are regulated during the
life cycle. In addition, phenotypic analysis of the imm mutant
showed that the development of mature sporophytes with the
appropriate reproductive structures (unilocular and plurilocular
sporangia) was not contingent on the wild-type sporophyte pattern
of early development (involving symmetric division of the initial
cell and mediate differentiation). These two, temporally separate
parts of the sporophyte developmental programme were genetically
uncoupled in the imm mutant. Hence, not only does E. siliculosus
exhibit alternation between developmental programmes involving
symmetric and asymmetric initial cell divisions during the
sporophyte and gametophyte phases of the life cycle, respectively,
but both symmetric (in the wild type) and asymmetric (in imm
individuals) initial cell divisions can give rise to the sporophyte
generation. Moreover, because the imm mutation represents a single
locus, germination and subsequent cell division patterns might have
been modified quite easily during evolution in the brown algal
lineage. This may help explain the variety of germination patterns
observed in different brown algal species.
Microarray analysis identified 40 genes whose level of expression
was modified in the imm mutant. This number is an underestimate
because only a small subset of the Ectocarpus gene set was
represented on the array. These data suggest that IMM may be
regulating a cascade of downstream genes to mediate its influence
on early sporophyte development. Analysis of the sequences of the
genes whose expression patterns were altered in the imm mutant
provided only limited information about the molecular events
underlying the observed phenotypes.
DEVELOPMENT
The imm life cycle mutant of Ectocarpus
Current efforts aimed at developing E. siliculosus as a model
species (Peters et al., 2004a; Coelho et al., 2007; Charrier et al.,
2008) are expected to provide a means to investigate, at the
molecular level, the mechanisms behind the phenomena described
in this study.
This work was supported by the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique,
the Région Bretagne, the European Union network of excellence Marine
Genomics Europe, the French GIS Marine Genomics, the University Pierre and
Marie Curie, and by a long-term European Molecular Biology Organisation
fellowship to S.M.C.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material for this article is available at
http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/135/8/1503/DC1
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